Page 8A NORTHWEST East Oregonian Saturday, October 31, 2015 Jefferson County treasurer found guilty of stealing money MADRAS (AP) — A jury on Thursday found a local treasurer in Oregon guilty of stealing money from her county. The Bulletin reports Jefferson County Treasurer Deena Goss was convicted of several counts of forgery, RI¿FLDO PLVFRQGXFW DQG theft. One forgery count is a felony that could carry up WR ¿YH \HDUV LQ SULVRQ7KH other 36 charges are misde- meanors. Goss is scheduled to be sentenced on Dec. 1, according to court records. Neither Goss nor her attorney could be reached for comment Thursday, but Goss’ mother told The Bulletin her daughter was falsely accused. “We’ve been through KHOO´VDLGKHUPRWKHU,UPD Symons. “She’s crushed. 'HYDVWDWHG´ The state accused treasurer Deena Goss of altering checks paid to various departments and then pocketing cash, though Goss’ attorney argued in going on when a resident bought a dog license for $26 but noticed that $46 had been deducted from his account. Grover, Goss’ attorney, argued that the money could have been stolen by another employee because the county had no extra protec- tions in place to verify the amount of cash deposited. Jefferson County commissioners plan to discuss whether they should Rob Kerr/The Bulletin via AP, File RI¿FLDOO\ UHTXHVW *RVV¶ This 2011 photo shows Jefferson County Treasurer resignation at a Wednesday Deena M. Goss in her office in Madras. A jury found meeting. Goss guilty Thursday of 36 charges related to the 7KH WUHDVXUHU¶V ¿QDQFLDO theft of county money. duties were reassigned court that another employee that county commissioners WR RWKHU RI¿FLDOV DQG could have taken the money. “respectfully request that employees after the Oregon Her attorney, Todd LQ OLJKW RI WKH FRQYLFWLRQ´ Department of Justice began investigating in Grover, said county Goss resign immediately. The statement said April 2014, according to accounting policies offer no way to prove beyond a the failure of an elected the news release. In May reasonable doubt that the RI¿FLDOWRUHVLJQDIWHUEHLQJ 2014, they removed the convicted of a felony would treasurer’s salary and insti- treasurer took any cash. Goss’ term as treasurer be “incongruous, repugnant tuted payment by an hourly stipend. runs until December 2016 DQGRIIHQVLYH´ The news release says and the conviction does During Goss’ four-day not require her to resign, trial, Assistant Attorney Goss hasn’t received any according to a news release General Kristen Hoffmeyer compensation since then. If from Jefferson County. VDLG WKH FRXQW\ RI¿FLDOV she returns to work, she will But it continues to say noticed something was be paid $30.81 an hour. BRIEFLY Elderly man hit and killed in crosswalk, woman arrested WALLA WALLA, Wash. $3²2I¿FLDOVVD\D Walla Walla man struck by a vehicle has died from his injuries. Walla Walla Police Department spokesman Tim Bennett says 77-year-old James A. Kooreny was crossing Isaacs Avenue in a crosswalk Thursday night when he was hit by a vehicle. He was taken to a local hospital where he died a short time later. Police say Heather A. Tarnasky was driving the Honda SUV that struck Kooreny. She was arrested following sobriety tests done at the scene and taken to jail on a vehicular homicide charge. Blood alcohol test results are pending. Authorities charge Tigard boy, 12, with attempted murder TIGARD (AP) — Tigard police took a 12-year-old boy into custody after he allegedly strangled a sibling. The boy faces charges of attempted murder in Washington County Juvenile Court. Police say the victim told a parent about the incident. The next day, the parent took both children to the boy’s school, where staff immediately called the VFKRROUHVRXUFHRI¿FHU 7KDWRI¿FHUDORQJZLWK a detective, conducted an investigation and took the boy into custody on Thursday. Newport crowned dominant West Coast commercial ¿VKLQJSRUW ASTORIA (AP) — Newport is now the dominant West Coast port IRUFRPPHUFLDO¿VKLQJ with the highest quantity of ¿VKRQWKHFRDVW Newport landed 124 million pounds of FRPPHUFLDO¿VKWKHWK highest quantity in the country. Newport edged out Astoria for the top West Coast spot, with the 12th highest city netting 122 million pounds, according to data from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. Astoria had been the top West Coast port by quantity — and the 10th highest in the nation — since it overtook Los Angeles in 2012, The Daily Astorian reports. Westport, Washington landed 100 million pounds, making it the third highest producer on the coast and 13th in the country. The nation’s top FRPPHUFLDO¿VKLQJSRUWE\ quantity for the past several years has been Dutch Harbor, Alaska. In terms of value, New Bedford, Massachusetts is the best commercial port in the country, bringing in $329 million last year. ,QWKH3DFL¿F1RUWKZHVW Astoria and Newport both saw drops in value, with Astoria landing $43 million, compared to $50 million in 2013. In Newport the commercial catch was worth $53 million, down from $55 million in 2013. Astoria and Newport rank 21st and 23rd in the nation for value, respectively. Drought helps solve missing person case EUGENE (AP) — Authorities say an eight-year-old missing person case was resolved in Oregon after the drought exposed a car that had been submerged in a pond. The Register-Guard reports that Lane County VKHULII¶VRI¿FLDOVVD\D driver on Monday spotted the car partially sticking out of a pond near a highway off-ramp. Detective Carl Wilkerson says LQYHVWLJDWRUVFRQ¿UPHG that the car was associated with a 59-year-old Junction City woman who went missing in November 2007. Linda Lee Perry had left her house to go shopping LQ6SULQJ¿HOGDQGQHYHU returned. He says a dive team found human remains in the SRQGDQGLGHQWL¿HGWKHPDV Perry’s. Investigators think 3HUU\GLHGLQDWUDI¿FFUDVK Ethics board says Josephine county violated public meetings law GRANTS PASS (AP) — An Oregon ethics commission has ruled that the Josephine County Board of Commissioners violated the state’s public meeting laws. The Daily Courier reports that the Oregon Government Ethics Commission says the Josephine board held closed-door sessions without proper MXVWL¿FDWLRQ Former county commissioner Sandi &DVVDQHOOL¿OHGD complaint in January. The ethics commission says county commissioners Keith Heck, Cherryl Walker and Simon Hare violated state law by discussing general county policies in three closed meetings that month and once in February. Walker was absent from the February meeting. Commissioners can DSSHDOWKH¿QGLQJVDWD hearing or negotiate Walker and Heck say the commissioners did nothing wrong. a settlement. Ethics Commission Executive Director Ron Bersin says Walker and Heck say the commissioners did nothing wrong. Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife via AP, File This remote camera photo taken May 2014 shows the wolf OR-7 on the Rogue River- Siskiyou National Forest in southwest Oregon. GPS collar stops tracking famous wandering wolf BEND (AP) — The wolf OR-7 became globally famous when he took off from his northeast Oregon pack four years ago and wandered thousands of miles in search of a mate, his movement tracked by a GPS satellite. His actions now be much harder to track. Wildlife RI¿FLDOV VD\ WKH FROODU WKDW transmitted his location through satellites and radio signals has stopped working. ³,W DOO ¿QDOO\ ZRUH RXW´ said John Stephenson, Oregon wolf coordinator for the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service in Bend. “The EDWWHU\GLHGEDVLFDOO\´ Without the regular infor- mation, biologists rely on trail cameras and in-person sightings to monitor him, Stephenson told the Bend Bulletin. Knowing the electronics were close to blinking out, state and federal wildlife managers made three attempts — last summer, last fall and early this spring — to trap OR-7 or another member of his Rogue Pack, said Mark Vargas, district wildlife biologist for the Oregon Department of Fish and Wildlife in Medford. The hope was to replace the batteries and keep the GPS data coming in and the radio signal going from OR-7 or track the pack by collaring another one of the wolves. “We’d love to get a collar EDFNRQ25´9DUJDVVDLG ³EXWWKDWGLGQ¶WKDSSHQ´ People around the world tracked OR-7 when he set off from the Imnaha Pack four years ago, wandering thousands of miles through Oregon, into Northern Cali- fornia and back. He found a mate, settled in the Cascade Range in southern Oregon DQGKDVKDG¿YHSXSV1RQH of the wolves in the pack has a working tracking collar. Although not able to track and locate OR-7 like before, Stephenson and Vargas know where he and his pack roam. For the past three years, the wolf and his mate have hunted and raised pups around the Sky Lakes Wilderness Area between Prospect and Fort Klamath. Now 6 years old, OR-7 left his pack when he was 2. His three older pups, born last year, are full-sized yearlings and may set out on their own soon. “(It) wouldn’t be surprising if one of WKHP WRRN RII WKLV IDOO´ Stephenson said. $700,000 Suspected norovirus outbreak closes Eugene school EUGENE (AP) — A Eugene school was closed for at least two days after 16 staff members called out sick in a suspected norovirus outbreak. 2I¿FLDOVVD\DQXPEHURI students at O’Hara Catholic School reported being sick. +HDOWKRI¿FLDOVDUH trying to determine the source of the outbreak as crews scrub the building from top to bottom with a chlorine-bleach mix. Norovirus is a highly contagious pathogen that can cause vomiting, diarrhea and stomach cramps. Lane County health department spokesman Jason Davis tells the Register-Guard that students are likely to return to school “early QH[WZHHN´PRVWRI¿FLDOV decide to settle by paying a ¿QHDQGDWWHQGLQJWUDLQLQJ $70,000 Find more value. Owning an exotic car that goes zero to sixty in a heartbeat would no doubt be exhilarating. For that same feeling on a grander level, you could use a fraction of those dollars to give hundreds of kids the educational support they need to really accelerate. The Oregon Community Foundation can help you create a charitable fund for the causes you care most about. Learn more at 541.382.1170 or visit us at www.oregoncf.org.